Archive
The Junto Archive holds a complete chronological listing of every post made on the blog, excepting “The Week in Early American History” posts.
2012
December
- Benjamin Park, Welcome to The Junto!
- Michael D. Hattem, Jeffersongate: The Case of Henry Wiencek
- Benjamin Park, The Early Americanist Holiday Book List; Or, My Favorite Books from 2012
- Ken Owen, Herman Husband and Failures of the Historical Imagination
- Tom Cutterham, Sympathy for the Founders
- Glenda Goodman, Music and Pleasure
- Michael Blaakman, Jay Gitlin’s French Frontier
- Michael D. Hattem, The Founders, the Tea Party, and the Historical Wing of the “Conservative Entertainment Complex”
- Michael D. Hattem, Interviews with Historians: Edwin G. Burrows
- Roy Rogers, The Agonies of “Christian Republicans”
- Matt Karp, Journal Articles in 2012: A Retrospective
- Eric Herschthal, Enough Already! Or, Do We Really Need More Haitian Scholarship?
- Jonathan Wilson, “Anonymous and Cacophonous Pleasures”
- Ken Owen, National Identity and the American Revolution
- Christopher Jones, Narrative History and the Collapsing of Historical Distance
- Seth Perry, About a Book
2013
January
- Jonathan Wilson, Then, Thenceforward, and Forever Free
- Rachel Herrmann, #AHA2013 Open Comment Thread
- Michael D. Hattem, American Revolution: The Game
- Glenda Goodman, Shall We Listen to That Again?
- Michael D. Hattem, The AHA and the Future of the Profession
- Matt Karp, The Plantation as Crime Scene: Quentin Tarantino’s “Django Unchained”
- Jonathan Wilson and Ken Owen, The Abolitionists in Primetime: Two Responses
- Sara Georgini, Brave New World: Digital Early America
- Tom Cutterham, Young Men of the Revolution
- Joseph M. Adelman, Primary Sources in the Classeroom: Politics and Pedagogy
- Katy Lasdow, Edutainment and the Boston Tea Party
- Jonathan Wilson, The Abolitionists Ride Again: Part 2
- Sara Georgini, Early America, with a Brooklyn Accent
- Michael D. Hattem, Where Have You Gone, Gordon Wood?
- Ken Owen, Sanitizing History
- Seth Perry, A Stack of Bibles
- Jonathan Wilson, The Abolitionists Go to War: Part 3
- Ken Owen, The Abolitionists: A Recap
- Benjamin Park, The New, New Political History: A Roundtable (Introduction)
- Roy Rogers, “There was a great argument yesterday on female excellence”: Gender & the Newest Political History
- Ken Owen, Politically Incorrect?
- Michael D. Hattem, More Public than Spherical: The NNPH and the “Public Sphere”
February
- All roundtable contributors, The NNPH: Odds, Ends, and Some Concluding Statements
- Katy Lasdow, Dos and Don’ts: Cover Letters and C.V.s
- Rachel Herrmann, Some Thoughts on Teaching: An Interview with James H. Merrell
- Matt Karp, A Very Old Book: The Case for Eric Hobsbawm’s Age of Revolution
- Sara Georgini, Forgotten Giant: Restoring Simms
- Benjamin Park, Articles of Note: Early 2013
- Tom Cutterham, Charles Beard, Economic Interpretation, and History
- Michael D. Hattem, Review: Todd Andrlik, “Reporting the Revolutionary War”
- Roy Rogers, Reprint This! Thomas Buckley’s “Church & State in Revolutionary Virginia”
- Sara Georgini, The “Extra-Illustrated” Man: NYPL’s Emmet Archive
- Mandy Izadi, A View from Albion
- Joseph M. Adelman, Favorite Sources in the Survey
- Sara Georgini, Tracing the Path of “American Journeys”
- Seth Perry, Make your Mark
- Rachel Herrmann, The Historian’s Appetite
- Glenda Goodman, Hybrid Moments: Should there/Could there be Atlantic Musicology?
- Michael D. Hattem, Review of “New Netherland in a Nutshell”
March
- Ken Owen, With Malice Toward None: An Academic Blogging Manifesto
- Sara Georgini, Spring at the “History Harvest”
- Tom Cutterham, Alexander Hamilton’s Originalism
- Rachel Herrmann (and Glenda Goodman), A Report from Savannah
- Rachel Herrmann, The Historian’s Lunch
- Ken Owen, The American Revolution: The TV Series
- Michael D. Hattem, Reconsidering Edmund Morgan’s “The Birth of the Republic, 1763-89″
- Roy Rogers, After Democratization?
- Ken Owen, Policy and Constitutional Principle
- Jonathan Wilson, “The Empire of Romance”: Some Notes on Novels in an Extensive Republic
- Seth Perry, Reading Becomes a Necessity of Life
- Benjamin Park, The Junto March Madness: Nominating Books for the Early American History Brackets
- Ken Owen, The Junto March Madness: The Bracket Is Here!
- Benjamin Park, Junto March Madness Round 1, Day 1: Brackets 1 and 2
- Benjamin Park, Junto March Madness Round 1, Day 2: Brackets 3 and 4
- Benjamin Park, Junto March Madness: Round One Results
- Zara Anishanslin, Guest Post: Things Colloquial: Material Culture at the 2013 Conference of the Society of Early Americanists
- Benjamin Park, Junto March Madness Round 2, Day 1: Brackets 1 and 2
- Sara Georgini, Digital Dissertation Workshop
- Benjamin Park, Junto March Madness Round 2, Day 2: Brackets 3 and 4
- Benjamin Park, Junto March Madness: Round Two Results
April
- Rachel Herrmann, Junto March Madness CANCELLED! (Now with an update)
- Benjamin Park, Junto March Madness: Sweet Sixteen
- Benjamin Park, Junto March Madness: Sweet Sixteen Results
- Benjamin Park, Junto March Madness: Elite Eight
- Tom Cutterham, Constitutional Interpretation and Historians
- Benjamin Park, Junto March Madness: Elite Eight Winners
- Benjamin Park, Junto March Madness: Final Four
- Benjamin Park, Junto March Madness: Final Four Results
- Benjamin Park, Junto March Madness: CHAMPIONSHIP GAME!!!
- Benjamin Park, Your Junto March Madness Winner: Edmund Morgan!
- Ken Owen, Junto March Madness: Some Reflections
- Benjamin Park, Pulling a “Butler”: Reflections on “Historiographical Heresy: A Conference on the Legacy of Jon Butler”
- Seth Perry, On Popularity and Self-Publishing
- Ken Owen, Gaming In The Classroom: Washington’s War
- Michael D. Hattem, Historians and Documentary Editing
- Jonathan Wilson, A Library for the Digital Republic: The DPLA Is Launched
- Sara Georgini, The Future of the Past Is Now: Digital Humanities Resource Guide
- Jonathan Wilson, Shadows of History in the Boston Marathon Manhunt
- Michael Blaakman, The Comprehensive Exam: A Reflection, with Qualifiers
- Tom Cutterham, Charles Beard: A Conference Recap
- Jonathan Wilson, Call for Links: History Carnival on May 1
- Joseph M. Adelman, Twitter as an Agent of Change
- Michael D. Hattem, Coursework: How Much is Enough?
May
- Michael D. Hattem, History Carnival 121
- Benjamin Park, New William and Mary Quarterly Special Issue: Centering Families in Atlantic History
- Rachel Herrmann, Digging Out My Cannibal Girl Hat
- Benjamin Park, New Journal Launch: J19: The Journal of Nineteenth-Century Americanists
- Joseph M. Adelman, Democratizing Pedagogy: The Just Teach One Project
- Michael D. Hattem, Plagiarism, Cheating, and Craigslist
- David J. Gary, Guest Post: Working for the Library
- Glenda Goodman, Savage Song
- Tom Cutterham, Thomas Hobbes and Post-Revolutionary American Citizenship
- Sara Georgini, Art & Soul
- Michael D. Hattem, Teaching Narrative in Graduate School
- Jonathan Wilson, An Alt Canon of Early American Primary Texts?
- Sara Georgini, Summer Reads
- Alyssa Zuercher Reichardt, Driving the Dissertation
- Ken Owen, Colonial Adventures in England: Jeremiah Dixon at the Bowes Museum
- Joseph M. Adelman, The 10,000 B.C. Question: How to Start the Survey
- Sara Georgini, Promised Land
- Michael D. Hattem, The Return of the American Revolution
- Michael D. Hattem, The JuntoCast is Here!
- Ken Owen, Colonial Adventures in England: The Benjamin Franklin House
- Benjamin Park, Junto Social at the “Revolution Reborn”: Friday, May 31
- Roy Rogers, Remembering “Jefferson’s Statute”
June
- Benjamin Park, Roundtable Review: Walter Johnson, River of Dark Dreams (Introduction)
- Mandy Izadi, Walter Johnson’s “River of Dark Dreams”
- Matt Karp, To See The World In A Bale of Cotton
- Rachel Herrmann, Pre-Conference Highlights for #SHEAR13
- Roy Rogers, Intersections upon a Dark River
- Joseph M. Adelman, A View from Beyond the Valley
- Sara Georgini, At River’s End
- Eric Herschthal, Science, Meet Slavery: “River of Dark Dreams” and the Future of Slavery Scholarship
- Michael D. Hattem, #RevReborn, Periodization, and the American Revolution
- Rachel Herrmann, Old-Fashioned Index Cards
- Lauric Henneton, Guest Post: “Good Newes from ye olde World”
- Eric Herschthal, Revolution Not Dead
- Aaron M. Brunmeier, Guest Post: Locating Gender in the Stacks
- Rachel Herrmann, More Pre-Conference Highlights for #SHEAR13
- Charlie McCrary, Guest Post: Report from RAAC 2013
- Michael D. Hattem, Digital Workflow for Historians
- Tom Cutterham, An Omohundro Conference Recap
- Jonathan Wilson, “The True Key of the Universe Is Love”
- Rachel Herrmann, Yet More Pre-Conference Highlights for #SHEAR13
- Ken Owen, Process and Protest
- Roy Rogers, Looking for Religion in all the Right (and Wrong) Places
- Michael D. Hattem, The JuntoCast, Episode 2: The American Revolution
- Alyssa Zuercher Reichardt, The Language Question
- Rachel Herrmann, More and More Pre-Conference Highlights for #SHEAR13
July
- Glenda Goodman, “It is now translated to America”: British Hymns in the Revolutionary Era
- Tom Cutterham, The New Left’s Usable Past
- Rachel Herrmann, Food in America and American Foodways
- Ken Owen, Why A Brit Should Teach American Revolutionary History
- Sara Georgini, Collecting Connecticut
- Rachel Herrmann, There’s a Conference Coming! (Pre-Conference Highlights for #SHEAR13)
- Ken Owen, History Is Not Science
- Jonathan Wilson, Edmund S. Morgan, 1916-2013
- Gordon Bond, Guest Post: Thomas Mundy Peterson and the Fifteenth Amendment
- Sara Georgini, Collecting Pennsylvania
- Rachel Herrmann, Final Pre-Conference Highlights for #SHEAR13
- Ken Owen, Violence, Revolution, and Lessons from Egypt
- Roy Rogers, The Problem of Virginia’s Colonial Establishment
- Katy Lasdow, Land and Language Symposium: A Recap
- Mark Boonshoft, Guest Post: Sports Talk Radio, Sabermetrics, and Carl Becker
- Ken Owen, SHEAR 2013: Presidential Plenary Session
- Joseph M. Adelman, Beyond the Valley of Mexico
- Ken Owen, SHEAR 2013: Conference Recap
- Alyssa Zuercher Reichardt, SHEAR 2013: Conference Recap
- Sara Damiano, Guest Post: Teaching with Legal Sources: The Case of Ann Hibbens
- Michael D. Hattem, A PhD Student’s Case for Embargoes
- Joseph M. Adelman, Guilty Pleasures: 1776
- Seth Perry, Reading and Magic
August
- Michael D. Hattem, The JuntoCast, Episode 3: Teaching the U.S. History Survey
- Sara Georgini, Buy, Sell, Read
- Michael D. Hattem, Roundtable: The Legacy of Edmund S. Morgan
- Sara Georgini, Puritan Family Ties
- Michael D. Hattem, Ed Morgan and the American Revolution
- Roy Rogers, The American Dilemma
- Ken Owen, The Paradox of Popular Sovereignty
- Michael Blaakman, Historians Who Love Just a Bit
- Michael D. Hattem, Pauline Maier (1938-2013)
- Joseph M. Adelman, Unorthodox Assignments
- Jonathan Wilson, Seeing Dead People: Biography in the Survey
- Tom Cutterham, Manco Capac and the Global American Founding
- Glenda Goodman, Lowell Mason’s Family Tree of Teachers
- Michael Blaakman, Traces of Early America
- Sara Georgini, Collecting Delaware
- Michael D. Hattem, Early American Film in the Classroom
- Sara Damiano, Guest Post: Pauline Maier and the History of Women in History
- Roy Rogers, When Was the Last Time You Loved America?
- Michael D. Hattem, Welcoming a New Member to The Junto
September
- Michael D. Hattem, Pondering the Future of Academic Journals
- Michael D. Hattem, The JuntoCast, Episode 4: Religion in Early America
- Ken Owen, Was The American Revolution A Good Thing?
- Lauric Henneton, Guest Post: An Academic Bridge Across the Atlantic
- Benjamin Park, Articles of Note: Spring and Summer 2013
- Christopher Minty, Guest Post: The Problem of Loyalism before the American Revolution
- Ariel Ron, Guest Post: Rediscovering the Pamphlisphere
- Sara Georgini, For Art’s Sake
- Tom Cutterham, “Barbarities, Extortions and Monopolies”
- Alyssa Zuercher Reichardt, The Plains of Abraham and Annus Mirabilis
- Sara Damiano, On Counting: A Reflection on Quantitative Research
- Roy Rogers, Howard & Me
- Seth Perry, Thomas Jefferson’s Qur’an: Islam and the Founders
- Nathan Jérémie-Brink, Guest Post: On the Past’s Presence: Historians against Slavery
- Roy Rogers, Enemies Foreign and Domestic
- Jonathan Wilson, Locating the Literati: Charles Brockden Brown in Philadelphia
- Sara Georgini, Autumn Reads
October
- Sara Damiano, A Conversation with Early American Studies
- Michael D. Hattem, The JuntoCast, Episode 5: The Constitution
- Michael Blaakman, Traces of Early America: Conference Recap
- Sara Georgini, New Horizons @ AAS
- Joseph M. Adelman, Epilogue or Prologue? The Royal Proclamation Turns 250
- Erik J. Chaput and Russell J. DeSimone, Guest Post: A New Forum Dedicated to the Study of the Dorr Rebellion and Constitutional Reform in Rhode Island
- Ken Owen, Historical Heroes
- Cambridge Ridley Lynch, Guest Post: Weather Talk
- Michael D. Hattem, Sounds of Silence: Managing Student Preparation
- Rachel Herrmann, Notes from #BrANCH13
- Christopher Jones, Interviews with Historians: Brett Rushforth
- Elizabeth M. Covart, Guest Post: The Dutch Revolt and New Netherland: 36th Annual New Netherland Seminar
- Ben Wright, Guest Post: Introducing “The American Yawp”
- Katy Lasdow, “Charles Beard at 100″: A Roundtable Recap
- Roy Rogers, What The Oatmeal Missed
- Alyssa Zuercher Reichardt, Research in Timelines
- Matt Karp, A Confederacy of Kidnappers: Steve McQueen’s “12 Years a Slave”
- Sara Damiano, Everyday Connections of Colonial Economies: Conference Recap
- Tom Cutterham, Litchfield Law School and the Revolutionary Elite
- Seth Perry, The Legends of Sleepy Hollow
November
- Rachel Herrmann, Teaching the Declension Narrative
- Tom Cutterham, Wood & Holton on the Constitution
- Rachel Herrmann, Mid-Semester Evaluations . . . Of You!
- Benjamin Park, Whither Early American Intellectual History?
- Katy Lasdow, Some Reflections of a First Time TA
- Peter Kotowski, Guest Post: On the Anvil of Labor History in the Revolutionary Era
- Michael D. Hattem, The JuntoCast, Episode 6: The Continental Congress
- Michael D. Hattem, My Lecturing Disjunction
- Glenda Goodman, American Studies Association: A Preview for Early Americanists
- Jonathan Wilson, Godly Heritage and Plantation Chic: The Case of Vision Forum
- Tom Cutterham, Reptiles of America
- Sara Damiano, Conference Panels and Intellectual Connections
- Christopher Jones, Review: Native Apostles: Black and Indian Missionaries in the British Atlantic World
- Rachel Herrmann, Q&A with Edward E. Andrews, Author of Native Apostles
December
- Michael D. Hattem, Roundtable: The Legacy of Pauline Maier
- Michael Blaakman, Pauline Maier and the Republican Revolution
- Sara Georgini, The New Old Revolutionaries
- Roy Rogers, Cold Water and Living Documents
- Ken Owen, Rough and Ready and Real
- Ken Owen, Whither the 18th Century?
- Benjamin Park, One Year Older and Wiser, Too…: The Junto Turns “1″
- Sara Georgini, Winter Reads
- Michael D. Hattem, The JuntoCast, Episode 7: The Great Awakening
- Rachel Herrmann, Connecting the Past with the Present: A Trip to the Grocery Store
- Michael D. Hattem, Interviews with Historians: Carol Berkin
- Alyssa Zuercher Reichardt, Rethinking the Early American Map
- Eric Herschthal, American Enlightenment! Which American Enlightenment?
- Sara Georgini, Archiving Abolition
- Michael D. Hattem, The “War on Christmas” in Early America
2014
January
- Joseph M. Adelman, On to Washington!
- Michael D. Hattem, Looking Less Backward: Ten (Relatively) Recent Books That Anyone Interested In Early American History Should Read
- Rachel Herrmann, Preparing for Final Exams…Wait, What?
- Joseph M. Adelman, Using Blogs in the Classroom
- Tom Cutterham, “Nor Any of the Rights of Citizenship”: Indians, Property, and International Law
- Ken Owen, Teaching Through Primary Sources: Henry Drax’s Plantation Instructions
- Rachel Herrmann, Review: The Larder: Food Studies Methods from the American South
- Joseph M. Adelman, As the Semester Looms
- Christopher F. Minty, Guest Post: Working on The Papers of Francis Bernard
- Benjamin Park, Using Contraries in the Classroom: Thoughts on Choosing Reading Assignments
- Jonathan Wilson, Using Local History in the Survey: City Streets
- Sara Georgini, Art in Bloom
- Michael D. Hattem, The JuntoCast, Episode 8: Thomas Paine and “Common Sense”
- Greg Brooking, Guest Post: Sir James Wright and Jenny, his free “black servant”
- Roy Rogers, The Kitten in the Bookcase
- Aaron M. Brunmeier, Guest Post: “Libraries in the Atlantic World” Conference Recap
February
- Rachel Herrmann, Introducing The History Carousel: Bringing the Past Full-Circle with the Present
- Robert Whitaker and Bryan S. Glass, Guest Post: “X” Marks the History: Plundering the Past in Assassin’s Creed IV
- Seth Perry, Are We All Book Historians Now?
- Ken Owen, The Generation Game
- Sara Damiano, Roundtable: James Merrell’s “Exactly as they appear” and Published Editions of Manuscript Sources
- Michael D. Hattem, A Long Time Ago in an Archive Far, Far Away
- Rachel Herrmann, These Aren’t the Docs You’re Looking For
- Joseph M. Adelman, Learning While Distracted
- Tom Cutterham, Was the American Revolution a Civil War?
- Roy Rogers, Gaming History
- Alyssa Zuercher Reichardt, Sinews of Power and Those Power Forgot
- Michael D. Hattem, On Undergraduate Writing
- Rachel Herrmann, The Great Writing and Editing Extravaganza of 2013
- Michael D. Hattem, The JuntoCast, Episode 9: The Early American Presidency
- Roy Rogers, Just How Free Was Religious Life in the Early American Republic?
March
- Joseph M. Adelman, Audiences, Publicity, and Engaged Academics
- Jonathan Wilson, Looking for “a World of Love”: Jonathan Edwards in the Big City
- Ken Owen, Junto March Madness: Take Two!
- Glenda Goodman, Throw John Smith Off Ship
- Ken Owen, Junto March Madness 2014: Call For Nominations
- Ken Owen, Junto March Madness 2014: The Unveiling of the Bracket
- Ken Owen, Junto March Madness 2014: Round 1, Brackets 1 and 2
- Rachel Herrmann, Junto March Madness 2014: Round 1, Brackets 3 and 4
- Rachel Herrmann, The History Carousel, Episode 2: Historical Fathers and Junto Dads
- Rachel Herrmann, Junto March Madness 2014: Round One Results
- Rachel Herrmann, Junto March Madness 2014: Round 2, Brackets 1 and 2
- Ken Owen, Junto March Madness 2014: Round 2, Brackets 3 and 4
- Rachel Herrmann, Junto March Madness 2014: Round Two Results
- Ken Owen, Junto March Madness 2014: The Sweet 16
- Ken Owen, Junto March Madness 2014: Sweet 16 Results!
- Rachel Herrmann, Junto March Madness 2014: Elite Eight
- Rachel Herrmann, Junto March Madness 2014: Elite 8 Results!
- Ken Owen, Junto March Madness 2014: The Final Four!
April
- Tom Cutterham, Introducing JuntoX: A New MOOC
- Ken Owen, Junto March Madness 2014: Championship Game!
- Ken Owen, Junto March Madness 2014: And The Winner Is…
- Joseph M. Adelman, Interview with Michael Jarvis, Junto March Madness 2014 Champion
- Seth Perry, Stonecutting and Religion in America
- Maya Rook, Guest Post: Dramaturging The Tower: A Historian’s Cannibalistic Adventures in Theater
- Michael Blaakman, A MOOC Confession
- Ken Owen, Is Blogging Scholarship? Reflections on the OAH Panel
- Michael D. Hattem, Yes, Virginia, there was an American Enlightenment
- Rachel Herrmann, The History Carousel, Episode 3: Teaching Across the Pond
- Tom Cutterham, How Did Democracy Become a Good Thing?
- Sara Georgini, Museum Miles
- Roy Rogers, Turn, Turn, TURИ
- Rachel Herrmann, A Rumination on “Perhaps”: Demos, Editing, and First Book Projects
- Jonathan Wilson, The Trouble with Global: Early Thoughts from an Early Americanist
- Sara Georgini, Summer Reads
May
- Benjamin Park, The Revolution is Reborn at Common-place
- Michael D. Hattem, On Assigning Undergraduate Reading
- Michael D. Hattem, The JuntoCast, Episode 10: Gender in Early America
- Joseph M. Adelman, History All Around Us
- Jonathan Wilson, Commencement in Early America: Pausing at the Portal
- Tom Cutterham, Notes on Thompson, Arendt, and Revolutionary Violence
- Tom Cutterham, The Public Sphere and Early American Democracy
- Matt Karp, Slavery, Abolition, and “Socialism” in the U.S. Congress
- Michael D. Hattem, Grade Inflation or Compression?
- Craig Gallagher, Guest Post: “Early Modern France and the Americas” Conference Recap
- Sara Damiano, Early America at the Berks
- Katy Lasdow, Herb Sloan’s Contributions to Scholarship on Jeffersonian America
- Joseph M. Adelman, Triggers in the Past
- Alyssa Zuercher Reichardt, Taking Print from Print Culture & Leaving the Public Sphere Behind
- Nora Slonimsky, Guest Post: Authors, Athletes and Law’s Privilege
- Carl Robert Keyes, Guest Post: Is There a Revisionist Doctor in the House?
- Joseph M. Adelman, Announcing the Junto Summer Book Club
June
- Matt Karp, Slavery and Reparations: A Voice from Barbados and a Report from Ghana
- Tom Cutterham, Putting “Republicanism” in Its Place
- Eric Herschthal, The Details Matter: On Ta-Nehisi Coates and Reparations
- Joseph M. Adelman, Summer Book Club, Week 1
- Michael D. Hattem, Benjamin Franklin and “our Seamen who were Prisoners in England”
- Benjamin Park, The Problem with Big Books; Or, Alan Taylor’s Biggest Sin
- Sara Damiano, Summer Book Club, Week 2
- Ken Owen, Announcing the Missouri Regional Seminar on Early American History
- Ken Owen, The Consequences of War: An Omohundro Institute Conference Recap
- Emily Merrill, Guest Post: Of Class and Courts-Martial: The Case of Ensign McVicar
- Michael D. Hattem, The JuntoCast, Episode 11: The Declaration of Independence
- Tom Cutterham, Summer Book Club, Week 3
- Jonathan Wilson, Varieties of Heritage Interpretation
July
- Michael Blaakman, “Let a thousand MOOCs bloom”: An Interview with Peter Onuf
- Michael D. Hattem, The First Year of Founders Online: An Interview with Kathleen Williams
- Michael D. Hattem, How Do You Pronounce This Blog’s Name, Anyway?
- Jonathan Wilson, Digital History in the Surveillance State
- Roy Rogers, SHEAR 2014 Annual Meeting Preview
- Jessica Parr, Guest Post: “George Whitefield at 300″ Conference Recap
- Jonathan Wilson, Summer Book Club, Week 4
- Roy Rogers, The Junto SHEAR 2014 Meet-up!
- Mandy Izadi, The Nation, the Global Game and the Weight of it All
- Don Johnson, Guest Post: The Revolutions in the Margins of AMC’s “TURИ”
- Tom Cutterham, On Gender and Genre
- Sara Damiano, Gone Conferencing
- Sean Trainor, Guest Post: The Decline of Barbers? Or, the Risks and Rewards of Quantitative Analysis
- Ken Owen, Can The Comment
- Alexander Manevitz, Guest Post: Seneca Village Memory: The Problem of Forgetting
- Tom Cutterham, Interview: Andrew Jackson O’Shaughnessy
- Mark Boonshoft, Guest Post: Teaching and the Problem with Parties in the Early Republic
August
- Sara Georgini, Summer Book Club, Week 5
- Rachel Herrmann, On Social Media Feeds for Historical Organizations and History Departments
- Sara Georgini, Autumn Reads
- Joseph M. Adelman, Summer Book Club, Week 6
- Alyssa Zuercher Reichardt, The Documentary Record on Fire and Reading Intentionality
- Matthew Crow, Guest Post: Thomas Jefferson and Public Historiography
- Michael D. Hattem, Welcoming New Members to The Junto
- Sara Damiano, Junto Summer Book Club: Interview with Kathleen Brown
- Michael D. Hattem, The Old World of the New Republic
- Tom Cutterham, Interview: Alex Gourevitch on Thomas Paine
- Spencer McBride, Guest Post: “A Display of Folly and Show”: Joseph Smith’s Impressions of Congress
- Sara Georgini, Up to Code
- Lindsay Schakenbach, Guest Post: Lowell & the Executive
- Katy Lasdow, Book Review: Maura D’Amore, Suburban Plots: Men at Home in Nineteenth-Century American Print Culture
- Mark Boonshoft, Trials and Tribulations of Writing while Sleeping
September
- Jonathan Wilson, Another Kind of Blood: Edward Baptist on America’s Slaver Capitalism
- Tom Cutterham, Is the History of Capitalism the History of Everything?
- Casey Schmitt, Guest Post: The Value of Storytelling
- Simon Newman, Guest Post: American and Scottish Independence: Hearts and Minds
- Tom Cutterham, Highlights from the British Group of Early American Historians
- Sara Georgini, Culture Club
- Christopher Jones, Maryland Football and Public Memory of the War of 1812
- Michael D. Hattem, Rip Van Digital
- Sara Georgini, Edinburgh’s Early Americans
- Jonathan Wilson, One-Star Amazon Reviews of Pulitzer Winners
- Jessica Parr, Guest Post: Reclaiming a Buried Past: Slavery, Memory, Public History, and Portsmouth’s African Burying Ground
- Katy Lasdow and Eric Herschthal, Recap: Old Friends/New Editors: A Conversation about Early American Publishing
- Rachel Herrmann, A Humorous(?) Post about People Traveling by Canoe
- Hannah Bailey, Guest Post: Researching en Français: French Archives, and Why They’re Worth It for All Early Americanists
- Tom Cutterham, Commodifying Labour, Commodifying People
- Sara Georgini, Making the Adams Papers
- Michael D. Hattem, The JuntoCast, Ep 12: Bailyn’s Ideological Origins of the American Revolution
- Sara Georgini, Object Lessons
October
- Roy Rogers, Conference: The Antislavery Bulwark: The Antislavery Origins of the Civil War
- Sara Georgini, Decoding Diplomacy
- Cassandra Good, Guest Post: Diplomacy, Slavery, Quids, and Much More in the Latest Volume of the Papers of James Monroe
- Michael Blaakman, Socializing, Speculating, and Speaking French in François Furstenberg’s Philadelphia
- Rachel Herrmann, Columbus Day video roundup
- Joseph M. Adelman, Telling the Story of Women in Printing
- Tom Cutterham, Consent in Early America, 1600-1900
- Ben Park, WMQ-EMSI Workshop CFP: Early American Legal Histories
- Christopher Jones, Academic Audiobooks: Or, a Thinly-Veiled Plea for Recommendations
- Casey Schmitt, Big History: Weighing the Benefits and Drawbacks of a Comparative Project
- Christopher Jones, Welcoming The Junto‘s Newest Member (Casey Schmitt)
- Michael D. Hattem, Welcome to The Junto‘s Newest Member (Jessica Parr)
November
- Michael D. Hattem, Roundtable: The Legacy of Alfred F. Young
- Sara Georgini, Empire/State
- Benjamin Park, George Robert Twelves Hewes and the Politics of Historical Pedagogy
- Roy Rogers, The Masquerade
- Michael D. Hattem, J. Franklin Jameson Superstar
- Jessica Parr, Creating a Public History Program
- Megan Brett, Guest Post: Megan Brett on the Papers of the War Department, 1784-1800
- Tom Cutterham, Economic Growth and the Historicity of Capitalism
- Michael D. Hattem, The JuntoCast, Episode 13: Education in Early America
- Elizabeth M. Covart, Guest Post: “Fear in the Revolutionary Americas” Conference Recap
- Jessica Parr, Skype in the Classroom: Applications for the History Classroom
- Hannah Bailey, Guest Post: Keeping the “Human” in the Humanities
- Alyssa Zuercher Reichardt, A Beginner’s Guide to Mapping Early America with Basic GIS
- Michael D. Hattem, The Story of “Evacuation Day”
- Sara Georgini, Contested Rites
December
- K.A. Woytonik, Guest Post: Teaching Toilets in an Age of American Ebola
- Casey Schmitt, The Value of Storytelling: Recap
- Sara Georgini, Winter Reads
- Rachel Herrmann, The Problem of Southern Indians’ Allegiance in the American Revolution
- Mark Boonshoft, The Great Moose Massacre
- Michael Blaakman, Teaching Hipster History: Ending the Semester on an Ironic Note
- Benjamin Park, The Junto Enters the Terrible Twos!
- Jonathan Wilson, Review: Kyle T. Bulthuis, Four Steeples over the City Streets
- Christopher Jones, Q&A with Kyle T. Bulthuis, Author of Four Steeples over the City Streets
- Spencer W. McBride, Guest Post: Strange Constitutional Bedfellows: The First and Third Amendments in the Mormon Quest for Religious Liberty
- Jessica Parr and Thomas S. Kidd, A Junto Birthday Party: Whitefield at 300 Roundtable
- Christopher Jones, Welcoming The Junto‘s Newest Member
- Jessica Parr, Q&A with Dane Morrison, Author ofTrue Yankees
- Michael D. Hattem, The JuntoCast, Episode 14: Popular Protest in Early America
- Mairin Odle, Guest Post: What’s in a Name? On Sports Teams and Scalp Bounties
- Sara Georgini, The Spy Who Came in from the Confederacy
2015
January
- Joseph M. Adelman, The Junto Guide to Early America at #AHA2015
- Roy Rogers, Maryland’s Protestant Revolution and the Problem of Religious Freedom
- Rachel Herrmann, Deadline approaching for Cannibalism in the Early Modern Atlantic
- Michael D. Hattem, Reading the Field from a Book: Some Thoughts on Eric Nelson’s The Royalist Revolution
- Tom Cutterham, Do Ideas Have Roots?
- Barton Price, Guest Post: Barton Price on Academic Support in the Survey Course
- Roy Rogers, Serial, Microhistory, and the Perils of Historical Research
- Sara Georgini, Reviewing Digital History
- Casey Schmitt, Roundtable: Richard S. Dunn, A Tale of Two Plantations
- Jessica Parr, Archives, Representativeness, and the Inner Life of Slaves
- Roy Rogers, In Media Res
- Benjamin Park, A Tale of the Classroom: Introducing Richard Dunn’s Book to Undergraduates
- Sara Georgini, Retelling “A Tale”: An Interview with Richard S. Dunn
February
- Jeffrey A. Fortin, Guest Post: Will the Real Paul Cuffe Please Stand Up?
- Christopher F. Minty, Guest Post: [Enter Catchy Title Here]: Working towards a Book Title
- Eric Herschthal, Bernard Bailyn’s Last Act?: An Interview with the Harvard Historian on His New Book
- Casey Schmitt, Murder!: Entangled History, String Theory, and Narrative
- Mark Boonshoft, State Lotteries in the Early Republic: Or What I Learned from John Oliver
- William R. Black, Guest Post: William Black, Gordon Wood’s Notecards and the Two Presentisms
- Jessica Parr, Tempests and Tedium in the Transatlantic: Shipboard Life in the 18th Century
- Jessica Parr, Q&A with Stephen R. Berry, Author of A Path in the Mighty Waters
- Benjamin Carp, Guest Post: Bastard out of Nevis: Lin-Manuel Miranda’s “Hamilton”
- Seth Perry, Shelby M. Balik’s Rally the Scattered Believers
March
- Rachel Herrmann, Junto March Madness Nominations Open
- Benjamin Park, Junto March Madness 2015: The Unveiling of the Bracket
- Benjamin Park, Junto March Madness: Round 1, Day 1 Voting
- Rachel Herrmann, Reminder: BGEAH CFP due March 20th
- Rachel Herrmann, Junto March Madness: Round 1, Day 2 Voting (Brackets 3 and 4)
- Rachel Herrmann, Junto March Madness Round 1 Results
- Rachel Herrmann, Junto March Madness Round 2 Voting on Brackets 1 & 2
- Kimberly Alexander, Guest Post: Why Shoes?
- Benjamin Park, Junto March Madness Round 2 Voting: Brackets 3 & 4
- Rachel Herrmann, Junto March Madness Round 2 Results
- Benjamin Park, Junto March Madness: Round 3 Voting
- Jonathan Wilson, Single-Perspective Narratives and the Politics of Marriage History
- Benjamin Park, Junto March Madness: Round 3 Results
- Rachel Herrmann, Junto March Madness: Elite Eight Voting
- Rachel Herrmann, Presenting Your Final Four March Madness Competitors
- Benjamin Park, Junto March Madness: Final Four Voting
- Michael D. Hattem, Have Cultural Historians Lost the American Revolution?
April
- Casey Schmitt, When Sources Talk Back
- Rachel Herrmann, Junto March Madness: Final Four Results AND Championship Voting
- Ken Owen, No Politics, No Revolution
- Rachel Herrmann, Junto March Madness: Presenting Your 2015 Champion
- Sara Georgini, Spring Reads
- Michael D. Hattem, Interview: Liz Covart of Ben Franklin’s World
- Joseph M. Adelman, Live Coverage of “So Sudden an Alteration” Conference
- Tom Cutterham, “Your Most Affectionate Friend…”
- Michael D. Hattem, The “Suddenness” of the “Alteration”: Some Afterthoughts on #RevReborn2
- Joseph M. Adelman, You Say You Want a Revolution
- Michael D. Hattem, The Early Americanists’ Guide to #OAH2015
- Rachel Herrmann, Teaching the Historiographical Intervention
- Christopher F. Minty, Review: Andrew Beaumont, Colonial America & the Earl of Halifax, 1748-1761
- Jordan Smith, Guest Post: Disaster, Death, and Distilleries
- Jessica Parr, Recap: “So Sudden an Alteration” Conference (9-11 April 2015)
- Rachel Herrmann, A is for “Anthropocene”
- Rachel Herrmann, Race, Riot, and Rebellion: A Bibliography
May
- Sara Georgini, The King’s Arms?
- Jessica Parr, Review: Abigail Swingen, Competing Visions of Empire
- Jessica Parr, Q&A: Abigail Swingen, Competing Visions of Empire
- Robert Gamble, Guest Post: African Americans, Mobility, and the Law
- Sara Georgini, Natural Histories
- Christopher Jones, Ballin’ Ben Franklin, Father Knickerbocker, and Lucky the Leprechaun: Representations of Early American History in NBA Team Logos
- Joseph M. Adelman, When the Old is New
- Craig W. Gill, Guest Post: Writing the Book Proposal
- Sara Georgini, Set in Stone
- Joseph M. Adelman, I’d Like to Teach Students About, Some Teleology
- Tom Cutterham, The American Revolution: People and Power
- Michael D. Hattem, Historical Charts and David Ramsay’s Narrative of Progress
- Chryssa Sharp, Guest Post: Incorporating History and the Humanities into International Business
June
- Jessica Parr, On Remembrance and Resurrection: Commemorating Portsmouth’s (NH) African Burying Ground
- Welcoming Two New Members to The Junto!
- Christopher F. Minty, The Importance of Partisanship in New York City, ca. 1769–1775
- Jordan Fansler, Guest Post: The Foundations of New England States’ Rights as a Unique Entity
- Joseph M. Adelman, The Maturing Blogosphere of Early America
- Tom Cutterham, Review: Janet Polasky, Revolutions Without Borders
- Carl Robert Keyes, The Digital Antiquarian: Keeping It Old, Making It New
- Sara Georgini, The Many & the One
- Vaughn Scribner, Guest Post: “Fabricating History: The Curious Case of John Smith, a Green-Haired Mermaid, and Alexandre Dumas”
- Joseph M. Adelman, On Twittiquette
- Benjamin Park, The Charleston Shooting and the Potent Symbol of the Black Church in America
- Michael D. Hattem, The Early American Digital World
- C. Dallet Hemphill, Guest Post: On Publishing Journal Articles
- Christopher F. Minty, Review: Jessica Choppin Roney, Governed by a Spirit of Opposition
- Rachel Herrmann, Q&A: Jessica Roney, Governed by a Spirit of Opposition
- Christopher F. Minty, Seriously, though, was the American Revolution a Civil War?
July
- Pete David and Andrew Heath, Guest Post: The Payroll Union’s Paris of America
- Vaughn Scribner, Guest Post: “Fabricating History PART TWO: The Curious Case Continues”
- Jessica Parr, Making the Most of Your Time in the Archives: Research Technology
- Jonathan Wilson, Personal Networks and a First Draft of the Literary Canon
- Mark Boonshoft, SHEAR 2015 Annual Meeting Preview
- Jessica Parr, Remembering Christopher Schmidt-Nowara, 1966-2015
- Roy Rogers, The Writer Assumes All Responsibility
- Jessica Parr, Teaching Trauma: Narrative and the Use of Graphic Novels in Discussing Difficult Pasts
- Jessica Parr, Graphic Novels Roundtable Q & A: Ari Kelman, Battle Lines: a Graphic Novel of the Civil War
- Roy Rogers, Graphic Novels in the Classroom
- The Junto Moderator, Post Removal
- Michael D. Hattem, In Memoriam: Lois Green Carr, 1922-2015
- Kimberly Alexander, Guest Post: 84th Annual Anglo-American Conference Recap, Fashion
- Casey Schmitt and Hannah Bailey, A[n] Historical Talk about Publishing with Gil Kelly, Gent.
- Sara Damiano and Joseph M. Adelman, Remembering C. Dallett Hemphill
- Michael Blaakman, SHEAR 2015: Conference Recap
- Rachel Herrmann, Digital Pedagogy Roundtable, Part 1: Students’ Access to Sources
- Jessica Parr, Digital Pedagogy Roundtable, Part 2: Pitching Courses for Non-Majors
- Joseph M. Adelman, Digital Pedagogy Roundtable, Part 3: Technical Knowledge
- Ken Owen. Digital Pedagogy Roundtable, Part 4: Funeral Trains and Social Media
- Rachel Herrmann, Digital Pedagogy Roundtable: Your Links
August
- Sara Georgini, Before the Trail
- Sara Georgini, After the Trail
- Charlotte Carrington-Farmer, Guest Post: Slave Horse: The Narragansett Pacer
- Tom Cutterham, Are Your People Getting Mad?
- Christopher F. Minty and Nora Slonimsky, Historians Attend Lin-Manuel Miranda’s Hamilton: An American Musical
- Tom Cutterham, The Origins of the American Revolution: A Roundtable
- Jessica Parr, The Origins of the American Revolution: Religion
- Mark Boonshoft, The Origins of the American Revolution: Social Experience and Revolutionary Politics
- Michael D. Hattem, The Origins of the American Revolution: Definition, Periodization, and Complexity
- Ken Owen, The Origins of the American Revolution: Politics and Politicized Societies
- Jacqueline Reynoso, The Origins of the American Revolution: Empire (guest post)
- Keith Grant, Guest Review: Keith Grant on Jonathan Den Hartog, Patriotism and Piety
- Keisha N. Blain, Guest Post: Racial Violence and Black Nationalist Politics
- Sara Georgini, Autumn Reads
- Christopher F. Minty, The American Revolution within the British Imagination
- Shaun Wallace, Guest Post: The Art of Absconding: Slave Fugitivity in the Early Republic
- Steven Elliott, Guest Post: Steven Elliott on Public History at the Morristown National Park
- Christopher F. Minty, Re-Writing the American Revolution: Kathleen DuVal’s Independence Lost
- Jessica Parr, Q&A: Kathleen DuVal, Independence Lost: Lives on the Edge of the Revolution
- Joseph M. Adelman, Hamilton, Art, History, and Truth
September
- Benjamin Park, Putting the “Pop” into Popular History: Pop Culture Videos in the Classroom
- Tom Cutterham, Interview: Saul Cornell and the Originalism Debate
- Bryan Rindfleisch, Guest Post: A Series of Fortunate Events: Navigating the Eighteenth-Century World with George Galphin
- CFP: Writing To and From the Revolution: A Special Issue
- Andrew M. Schocket and Billy G. Smith, Guest Post: MEAD: The Magazine of Early American Datasets
- Christopher F. Minty, Finding Its Way: Gordon Wood and theWilliam and Mary Quarterly
- Abigail B. Chandler, Guest Post: British Group in Early American History Conference Recap
- CFP: Rethinking Women’s History (Paris, June 2016)
- Christopher Jones, Q&A: Keith Grant and Denis McKim,Borealia: A Group Blog on Early Canadian History
- Jessica Parr, Careful Hands, Epistolary Spaces: Review of The Opened Letter
- Mark Boonshoft, Q&A: Lindsay O’Neill, The Opened Letter
- Kevin Gannon, Guest Post: The Constitution, Slavery, and the Problem of Agency
- Kathryn Snyder, Guest Post: Remembering Ethan Schmidt
- Rachel Herrmann, The Wandering Essay: A Lesson Plan for Teaching Writing
- Tom Cutterham, The Question of Narrative
- Sara Georgini, History & Story
- Jessica Parr, Narrative, Biography, and Hagiography: Reflections on Some Challenges in Microhistory
- Jonathan Wilson, Not Only for Readers: Why Scholars Need Narrative
- Rachel Herrmann, Revisiting Red Jacket, alias Cow Killer
October
- Emily Merrill, Edifying Terror: Publicity and the Problem of Punishment
- Craig Hanlon, Guest Post: John Adams–Attorney and Barrister
- Mark Boonshoft, Legal Professionalization and the American Revolution
- Abby Chandler, Guest Post: Law and Sexual Misconduct in New England, 1650-1750
- Sara Georgini, The Junto Goes to Washington: #USIH15 Preview
- Sara Damiano, Q&A: Cassandra Good, Author of Founding Friendships
- Robert Taber, Guest Post: Emerging Histories of the French Atlantic
- Tom Cutterham, Continuing the Debate on Slavery and Capitalism
- Tim Worth, Guest Post: The “Scotch War”: Scotophobia and the War of American Independence
- Sara Georgini, A Toast to John Adams
November
- Joseph M. Adelman, The Day the Presses Went Silent
- Edward E. Baptist, Guest Post: Correcting an Incorrect “Corrective”
- Carl Robert Keyes, Guest Post: Revisiting Women of the Republic with Linda Kerber at the American Antiquarian Society
- Christopher F. Minty, Roundtable: Academic Book Week—How Should We Write History?
- Tom Cutterham, Roundtable: Academic Book Week—What’s an Academic Book Anyway?
- Ken Owen, Roundtable: Academic Book Week: Alternative Entries To Familiar Topics
- Sara Georgini, Roundtable: Academic Book Week—On Trade/Craft
- Jessica Parr, Interview: Terri Snyder, The Power to Die
- Richard Calis and Madeline McMahon, Guest Post: The Winthrops and their Books: A Transatlantic Tale
- Christopher F. Minty, Early America Comic Con: Drawing the American Revolution
- Jonathan Wilson, Podcasts for Thanksgiving
- Jessica Parr, History and the Seeds of Memory: Reflections on Ric Burns’ The Pilgrims
December
- CFP: 2016 NEH Seminar: Exploring American Democracy with Tocqueville as Guide
- Benjamin Park, My Favorite Books from 2015: Or, a Christmas Book List for Your Early American History Nerd Friends
- Joseph M. Adelman, Alternative Fractions
- Jessica Parr, A Threenager! Or, The Junto Turns Three
- Robert Taber, Guest Post: What Happens at the Southern…
- Joseph M. Adelman, The Revolution Will Be Live-Tweeted
- In Memoriam: Andrew Cayton
2016
January
- Jessica Parr, In Memoriam: Sidney W. Mintz
- Tom Cutterham, Alexander Hamilton and the Inconvenient 1780s
- Jonathan Wilson, “Terrorism” in the Early Republic
- Joseph M. Adelman, Early America at AHA 2016
- Rachel Hermann, An Interview with Daniel K. Richter
- Benjamin Park, Re-Conceiving the Age of Revolutions in the Age of Obama
- Joseph M. Adelman, Teaching History Without Chronology
- Christopher F. Minty, “UNITE OR DIE”: John Holt’s New-York Journal; or, the General Advertiser and the Imagery of Allegiance
- Rachel Herrmann, The Book as a 400 Individual Medley
- Casey Schmitt, Can Class Participation Be Taught?
- Sara Damiano, An Interview with Carl Robert Keyes, creator of Adverts250
February
- Jessica Parr, Promoting Your Book
- Michael D. Hattem, “Early America” in The Open Syllabus Project
- Bryan Rindfleisch, Guest Post: Native American History & the Explanatory Potential of Settler Colonialism
- Tom Cutterham, Sailors, States, and the Bureaucracy of Revolution
- Alexandra Montgomery, Guest Post: Discovering Witches
- Mark Mulligan, Guest Post: How We Love to Hate Puritan New England
- Christopher F. Minty, An Interview with Ted O’Reilly, New-York Historical Society
March
- Rachel Herrmann, March Madness Call for Nominations
- Rachel Herrmann, Junto March Madness 2016: The Unveiling of the Brackets
- Rachel Herrmann, Junto March Madness 2016: Round 1 Voting
- Rachel Herrmann, Junto March Madness Round 1 Results
- Rachel Herrmann, Junto March Madness Round 2 Voting
- Rachel Herrmann, Evolution of an Article
- Rachel Herrmann, Junto March Madness Round II Results, Sweet 16 Voting
- Rachel Herrmann, Junto March Madness Sweet Sixteen Results
- Rachel Herrmann, Junto March Madness Elite Eight Voting
- Rachel Herrmann, Junto March Madness Elite Eight Results and Final Four Voting
- Joseph M. Adelman, The Significance of Old Historiography in American History
- Sara Damiano, Revisiting New England’s Legal Development: Review of Chandler,Law and Sexual Misconduct
April
- Michael D. Hattem, A Junto Announcement!
- Rachel Herrmann, Junto March Madness Semi-Final Results and Finals Voting
- Bryan Rindfleisch, Guest Review: Andrew Lipman, The Saltwater Frontier
- John Garcia, Guest Post: A Recap of Situation Critical!
- Rachel Herrmann, March Madness 2016: Presenting your Champion
- Ben Carp, Guest Cross-Post: Benjamin Carp, “The Paradox of Paradox”
- Tom Cutterham, Primitive Accumulation as Creative Destruction?
- Tom Cutterham, Commodification, Specialization, Mechanization
- Christopher F. Minty, James Rivington: Printer, Loyalist, Spy?
- Ken Owen, Historians and Hamilton: Founders Chic and the Cult of Personality
- Rachel Herrmann, Teaching with Databases: An Early American Atlanticist’s Conundrum
- Casey Schmitt, It Ain’t Over Till It’s Over
- Michael Blaakman, Building Intellectual Community at SHEAR
May
- Steven J. Peach, Guest Post: Native American History within #VastEarlyAmerica
- Tom Cutterham, Historians in an Age of Revolution
- Michelle Orihel, Guest Post: A Pamphlet War In Song: Teaching Revolutionary Print Culture with the Musical, Hamilton
- Casey Schmitt, Early America in Español
- Hannah Bailey, Early America en Français
- Jessica Parr, Research in London
- Christopher F. Minty, Non-Americans Researching Early America in North America
- Aaron Graham, Guest Post: Research in Jamaica
- Christopher F. Minty, Regional Remembering and Joseph Warren—America’s First President?
- Seth Perry, On The Origins of American Religious Nationalism
- Taylor Spence, Guest Post: Reporting from the Edges of Exceptionalism: Early American History in Oceania in 2016
- Benjamin Park, Call for Papers: 2016-17 Missouri Regional Seminar on Early American History
- Patrick Johnson, Guest Post: More Atlantic Archives
June
- Christopher Jones, Q&A: Zachary Hutchins, editor of Community without Consent: New Perspectives on the Stamp Act
- Kate Carté Engel, Guest Post: How Do We Find Religion in the American Revolution?
- Roy Rogers, The Sacred and the Secular in Early National Virginia
- Jonathan Wilson, What Do Early Americanists Offer the Liberal Arts?
- Benjamin Park, What Happened to the “Democratic” in the “Age of Democratic Revolutions”?
- Jessica Parr, Review: Alejandra Dubcovsky, Informed Power: Communication in the Early American South
- Rachel Herrmann, Q&A with Alejandra Dubcovsky
- Jonathan Wilson, What Do Early Americanists Offer the Liberal Arts?—Part II
- Michael Blaakman, #WhatComesNext? Book Ideas for the Hamilton Lover in Your Life
- Sara Georgini, 13 Revolutions +1
- Tom Cutterham, Summer Reading 2016
July
August
- Benjamin Park, Kicking off the 2016-2017 Season
- Rachel Herrmann, Why the Exeter Chiefs Should Rebrand Themselves
- Tom Cutterham, Women and the History of Capitalism
- Jonathan Wilson, What’s Livetweeting For, Anyway?
- Ken Owen, The 1904 Olympics: The American Future and the American Past
- Michael D. Hattem, Junto Back-Catalog Resources
- Joseph M. Adelman, So You Want to Write a Job Letter
- Benjamin Park, The Mormon National Convention, 1844
- Christopher Jones, Review: Emily Conroy-Krutz, Christian Imperialism: Converting the World in the Early American Republic
- Alyssa Zuercher Reichardt, Hidden Bureaucratic Forget-me-nots and What to Make of Ubiquity
- Casey Schmitt, Love Letters and the Digital Turn
- Ken Owen, Gawker, Gossip, and the General Advertiser
- Mark Boonshoft, Early American Historiography at the Dawning of the Age of Aquarius
- CFP: Undiplomatic History: Rethinking Canada in the World
- Christopher F. Minty, “In the Service of the Crown ever since I came into this Province”: The Life and Times of Cadwallader Colden
- Jessica Parr, Doing Digital History 2016: A Recap
- Nora Slonimsky, A Tale of Two Bounties: The Christian Brothers, Mutinies, and Potential Piracies
September
- Michael D. Hattem, Dissertating with Scrivener
- Sara Georgini, Autumn Reads
- Rachel Herrmann, Seeking Sabbatical Advice
- Roy Rogers, The Strange Death(?) of Political History
- Benjamin Park, Review: Matthew Karp, This Vast Southern Empire (cross-post)
- Casey Schmitt, The Continental Toehold Dilemma
- Jonathan Wilson, Making a Webpage for a Conference Paper